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With Windows Vista, it’s a must to have good fast memory
installed in your PC. The best memory costs a lot of money, especially once
you reach above 1GB sticks. In this short piece about Memory performance
under Windows Vista we are testing out numerous sticks against both the
Windows Experience Rating as well as the amount of Physical Memory you have
on boot. We also state what difference it makes in the feel of speed from
the operating system.

The Corsair memory was an expensive 1GB pack of 2x512
memory, we ran the plain Windows Vista benchmarking tool on this memory
at the latency value of 4-4-4-12 to maintain stability of both the system
and of the memory. Remember that all the benchmarking we are doing here
is for Windows Vista testing only, it’s simply to show what memory size
and speed is best for users to go with right now and the most expensive
will not always be the best.

Test Setup

AMD 5000+ X2 AM2 Based Processor

Soundblaster X-Fi

ATI X1900 XT 512MB Graphics Card

Samsung SpinPoint 250GB SATA II Drive

Windows Experience Rating: 4.5

Physical Memory Used on Boot: 49%

The 1GB stick of memory we used with this test still performed
very well in Windows Vista and for a basic user this is probably the perfect
size memory to go with, if you are running just basic programs and not playing
any new games that are out right now, 1 GB will probably suit you. If you
want to be running Office 2007, Games for Windows or running Media Center
and Media Center extender, you will need more memory.

Using the Corsair memory my plain start up showed that
(when I ran Outlook 2007) 68% of my memory resources were already used up.
If you compare this to the usage on the Crucial sticks (45%) you can see
the need for more RAM installed in your system.

Overall performance in Windows Vista with 1GB of ram isn’t
bad and the speed of the OS is still decent enough for general tasks, but
when you are gaming in Vista you really start to notice the drag on resources.

The Crucial kit is more expensive than the Corsair pack
but this time it is a total of 2GB in a 2x1GB pack, remember that Vista
takes up a lot more memory than Windows XP ever did. If you went for 2GB
of the Corsair memory you are looking at spending over £300 whereas with
Crucial’s excellent ballistics memory you will be around the £260 mark.

Test Setup

AMD 5000+ X2 AM2 Based Processor

Soundblaster X-Fi

ATI X1900 XT 512MB Graphics Card

Samsung SpinPoint 250GB SATA II Drive

Windows Experience Rating: 5.9

Physical Memory Used on Boot: 26%

As you can see, the Crucial memory shows a large improvement
in the Windows Experience Ratings, this is mostly due to the fact that it
is a couple of larger size memory sticks, but the Crucial Memory performed
better too even with just 1GB installed on our Vista test machine. This
was a surprising result as the Corsair memory is well known to be a very
good stick of memory.

Overall speed in Windows Vista was excellent, everything
performed better thanks to the extra memory installed in the system, games
finally ran smoothly and it helped show what a good gaming system Vista
will become in the future.

Mushkin EM2-6400
2 GB Kit (2x1GB)

- $263

Frequency: 800MHz

Latency: 5-5-5-12

Parity: Unbuffered

Voltage: 1.9V

Pins: 240

Module: 128Mx64

Chip: 64Mx8

The Mushkin kit is the cheapest out of the three packs
and the good news is that it works very well in Windows Vista, the latency
is slower than that of both the Crucial kit and the Corsair kit, but not
enough for most general users to notice.

Test Setup

AMD 5000+ X2 AM2 Based Processor

Soundblaster X-Fi

ATI X1900 XT 512MB Graphics Card

Samsung SpinPoint 250GB SATA II Drive

Windows Experience Rating: 5.9

Physical Memory Used on Boot: 26%

As you can see, the Windows Experience Rating was the
same as on the Crucial set of sticks, this is simply because the rating
can’t currently go any higher than 5.9. So because of this we had to just
the performance of the machine itself and in general desktop work such as
Internet Explorer, Word, Outlook and such like, the Mushkin performed just
as well as the 2 GB of more expensive crucial memory, but in gaming it was
slightly slower, although this was not very noticeable. So overall I have
to say that if I was on a budget I would happily pay out for the 2 GB of
Mushkin memory, remember that 2 GB of cheaper memory is ALWAYS better than
1 GB of very expensive memory as you machine will make full use of it.

So overall it seems that the best package from these three companies
for based on price and performance is Crucial's excellent set, but for pricing
the Mushkin pack is fantastic value for the 2GB's you get. Finally the Corsair
memory while very expensive is some probably the best on the market, but
paying such a high price for 2GB's or more seems way over the top for general
PC use when you don't notice a major difference in performance.

OCZ PC2-6400 Platinum Vista Performance Edition 4GB
(2x2048MB)

-

800MHz DDR2

CL 5-4-4-15 (CAS-TRCD-TRP-TRAS)

Available in 2GB Modules and 4GB (2x2048) Dual Channel
Kits

Unbuffered

Platinum XTC* Heatspreader

OCZ Lifetime Warranty

2.1 Volts

240 Pin DIMM

The OCZ kit is the highest price out of the bunch,
but that is simply because it is the only 4GB kit we have been sent.

Test Setup

AMD 5000+ X2 AM2 Based Processor

Soundblaster X-Fi

ATI X1900 XT 512MB Graphics Card

Samsung SpinPoint 250GB SATA II Drive

Windows Experience Rating: 5.9

Physical Memory Used on Boot: 23%

As you can see, the Windows Experience Rating was the
same as on the Crucial and Mushkin set of sticks, this is simply because the rating
can’t currently go any higher than 5.9 once again. So because of this we
once again had to judge
the performance of the machine itself and in general desktop work such as
Internet Explorer, Word, Outlook and such like, the OCZ set performed
better than any of the other in the set we have here, but in gaming it was
slightly slower when just using 2GB's, but of course it was far better
once again when used in the full 4GB capacity that it should be,
although this was not very noticeable. I believe the OCZ set offers the
best value in this round.

So overall it seems that the best package from these three companies
for based on price and performance is Crucial's excellent set, but for pricing
the Mushkin pack is fantastic value for the 2GB's you get while the
OCZ set is superb value and performance for a 4GB kit. Finally the Corsair
memory while very expensive is some probably the best on the market, but
this depends on whether you feel the need for 4GB's in your PC. My view
is still the more you have on a Vista PC the better and smoother your
experience becomes.